New Words:

awenen - who, whose
niin - i, my
giin - you, your

Note.

Personal pronouns like niin, giin, etc, in Ojibwe mean not only 'I', 'you', but also 'my', 'your', etc.

Awenen mean also 'who's'.

Personal pronouns are used there to attract attention to a possessor, not to a thing he possesses.
Ojibwe personal pronouns are called - emphatic personal pronouns. Because they are used
mostly to emphasize a person in statements. Check a difference:

Grammar note.

Personal pronouns in Ojibwe are called emphatic personal pronouns because of a role they usually play in a sentence.
They emphasize and attract attention to themselves. Used in possessive meaning - my, your, etc they attract attention to
a possessor.